Moneycontrol
HomeNewsOpinionFor ECB rate cutters, the music is as important as the words

For ECB rate cutters, the music is as important as the words

Policymakers need to send confidence-boosting signals to bolster sluggish economies

September 09, 2024 / 16:37 IST
Story continues below Advertisement

It’s probably too much to ask for the ECB to shift emphasis to the growth and employment side of the economy like the Fed has.

There aren't many sure things in life, but a second interest-rate cut from the European Central Bank Thursday is one of them. A 25 basis point reduction in its deposit rate to 3.5% is fully priced in by traders, and a plethora of Governing Council members have called for it. That’s why we’re focused here on what comes next, for the war on inflation is won and policymakers now have an unpleasant-looking economic downturn to combat.

It's impressive the ECB will have cut twice ahead of the Federal Reserve, a point that won't be left unmentioned Thursday in Frankfurt, I'm sure. But the ECB has so much hard work ahead if the euro area is to avoid another grim downturn. This meeting is a quarterly review with updated forecasts, featuring downward revisions on growth and inflation likely as both are notably higher than economists’ survey averages. It helps the ECB’s negotiated wage-growth tracker has decelerated to 3.6% annually in the second quarter from 4.7% in the first.

Story continues below Advertisement

The most important signal the Governing Council could send is roughly how much it expects to cut rates in the months ahead. All that takes is an explicit acceptance of what the market is already pricing in — rather than the usual series of pushbacks and handwringing. The specific timing, and how much it eases this year, are of secondary importance for the real economy. Predictability on financing costs for investment planning is the holy grail for corporates.

It's the message that will do the heavy lifting. There's little point in loosening monetary policy if you're not reaping the rewards of a boost to confidence and activity. Hopefully, it hasn't escaped policymakers’ attention that oil prices have dropped 15% over the summer break — and are on track to head lower still. The risks are growing more for an undershoot of the precious 2% inflation target — disinflation getting anywhere near deflation will be an economic millstone.